Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70307 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 71 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 ship 4 Captain 4 Admiral 3 Sir 3 Navy 3 Lord 3 England 2 illustration 2 german 2 french 2 british 2 Royal 2 New 2 Nelson 2 Mr. 2 Fleet 1 spanish 1 officer 1 man 1 hope 1 fleet 1 dutch 1 day 1 cruiser 1 brazilian 1 american 1 William 1 Vols 1 Vermont 1 VICTORY 1 United 1 Tromp 1 Tirpitz 1 The.= 1 States 1 St. 1 Spaniards 1 Spain 1 School 1 Scapa 1 San 1 STORY 1 Ruyter 1 Rio 1 Richard 1 Rev. 1 Reichstag 1 Punta 1 Prussia 1 Prince Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 2569 ship 1285 fleet 1273 man 1039 time 844 day 772 officer 700 year 689 sea 552 gun 482 admiral 460 enemy 450 war 424 board 392 place 371 illustration 363 vessel 360 cadet 359 line 358 order 351 water 351 sail 331 way 326 part 316 captain 305 number 305 deck 304 squadron 304 boat 302 hour 297 side 279 night 263 work 245 port 237 fire 234 flag 234 crew 233 service 230 wind 228 morning 227 coast 224 battle 223 hand 221 action 214 force 213 people 210 shore 208 country 207 one 206 thing 204 king Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 4373 _ 529 Admiral 528 Captain 489 | 485 Sir 322 Nelson 282 Britannia 276 English 271 England 267 Navy 258 6d 238 Mr. 203 Lord 202 Fleet 192 French 184 John 179 Germany 164 Royal 151 Admiralty 150 German 142 b 126 King 126 Edition 125 New 123 Dutch 122 St. 122 Naval 121 W. 118 VICTORY 118 Prince 114 British 113 George 110 William 109 . 106 Majesty 105 College 104 States 104 Bay 103 President 103 Evans 102 de 102 Louisiana 99 S. 97 H. 95 Spaniards 95 Edward 94 J. 93 United 93 May 93 Illustrated Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 3319 it 3179 he 1955 they 1193 them 1065 him 1036 you 888 we 834 i 414 she 303 us 274 himself 241 her 204 me 200 themselves 95 itself 69 one 41 myself 36 ourselves 33 herself 23 ''em 21 yourself 10 ours 9 theirs 6 yours 3 mine 3 his 2 ye 2 hers 1 |krupp 1 whereof 1 thou 1 thee 1 ia 1 em Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 15745 be 4720 have 1162 make 1093 do 900 go 879 take 827 come 718 say 620 see 594 get 567 give 464 find 391 send 360 know 326 pass 325 follow 323 leave 318 receive 315 keep 277 put 258 call 248 carry 246 bring 233 sail 233 fall 232 begin 220 think 217 return 216 lose 215 stand 214 show 211 become 200 enter 189 run 189 appear 187 look 187 bear 179 remain 176 tell 171 seem 164 hold 162 arrive 158 turn 155 set 154 lie 151 order 146 join 144 command 143 use 143 lay Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 1981 not 828 so 793 then 763 great 750 up 720 out 689 more 657 other 604 very 584 only 577 first 574 good 505 well 480 as 475 naval 428 many 411 most 407 now 403 much 378 long 371 little 368 down 368 about 349 however 344 also 335 soon 329 such 313 own 308 off 300 small 300 large 293 same 284 french 280 german 270 again 263 there 259 last 246 here 245 new 244 in 243 few 241 never 241 away 237 british 236 english 234 old 227 far 223 on 222 just 222 even Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 160 good 104 most 67 least 65 great 35 high 25 large 16 late 16 early 13 slight 13 Most 12 low 11 fine 10 small 9 near 8 heavy 7 warm 7 brave 7 bad 6 strong 6 deep 6 big 6 able 5 long 5 full 5 fast 4 short 3 southernmost 3 rich 3 old 3 headmost 3 fair 3 eld 3 easy 3 dear 3 clean 3 bold 2 wild 2 weak 2 swift 2 stout 2 safe 2 rough 2 remote 2 proud 2 new 2 mighty 2 midd 2 manif 2 hard 2 grand Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 307 most 19 well 11 least 2 hard 1 strongest 1 near 1 highest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4 fleet was so 3 _ was so 3 fleet did not 3 ships came up 2 _ had not 2 _ is _ 2 _ was as 2 _ was not 2 _ was now 2 _ went down 2 day goes round 2 days is so 2 enemy were not 2 fleet being now 2 fleet came up 2 fleet had not 2 fleet was here 2 men were ashore 2 nelson was not 2 nelson was now 2 nelson was then 2 nelson was therefore 2 officers making up 2 orders were also 2 ship goes back 2 ship made so 2 ship was not 2 ship was now 2 ships do well 2 ships were not 2 ships were scarcely 2 ships were so 2 vessels were so 1 _ are favourable 1 _ are not 1 _ being ahead 1 _ being so 1 _ being terribly 1 _ came up 1 _ comes littoris 1 _ coming up 1 _ did _ 1 _ did not 1 _ do _ 1 _ does not 1 _ fell flat 1 _ got on 1 _ had only 1 _ has really 1 _ is admittedly Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ are not properly 1 _ had not yet 1 _ stood no more 1 days was not exactly 1 enemy was not great 1 enemy were not there 1 fleet had no information 1 fleet had no notice 1 fleet had no sooner 1 fleet was not extravagant 1 guns are not better 1 guns were not half 1 man has no business 1 nelson made no mention 1 officers had no intention 1 officers had no time 1 officers was not less 1 officers were not even 1 order was no sooner 1 ship was not able 1 ship was not far 1 ship were not more 1 vessel had no such 1 vessel lost no time 1 war was not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 45583 author = Burrows, C. W. title = Scapa and a Camera Pictorial Impressions of Five Years Spent at the Grand Fleet Base date = keywords = Base; FLOW; Fleet; H.M.S.; Orkney; Scapa; cruiser; german; hope; illustration; ship summary = the German ships at Scapa Flow, their dramatic sinking on 21st June, GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "MOLTKE" AT SCAPA FLOW 105 GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "DERFFLINGER" AT SCAPA FLOW 106 GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "HINDENBURG" AT SCAPA FLOW 106 Navy at the Grand Fleet Base at Scapa Flow, and, it is hoped, may reach [Illustration: THE GRAND FLEET BASE AT LONG HOPE, 1916, LOOKING TOWARDS Grand Fleet), and at Long Hope and Lyness by the Base ships, whilst [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLESHIP "KAISER" ENTERING THE BOOM AT SCAPA [Illustration: HOSPITAL SHIPS AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: THE INTERNED GERMAN SHIPS AT SCAPA.] [Illustration: THE INTERNED GERMAN SHIPS AT SCAPA.] [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "SEYDLITZ." (One of the ships which [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "MOLTKE" AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "DERFFLINGER" AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: GERMAN BATTLE CRUISER "HINDENBURG" AT SCAPA FLOW.] [Illustration: PLAN OF THE ANCHORAGE OF GERMAN SHIPS AT SCAPA FLOW.] id = 56653 author = Hurd, Archibald title = The German Fleet Being The Companion Volume to "The Fleets At War" and "From Heligoland To Keeling Island date = keywords = Act; Admiral; Emperor; Empire; England; Fleet; Government; Great; Law; League; Navy; Prussia; Reichstag; Tirpitz; William; british; german; ship summary = of sea-power of Japan were sown by British naval officers, including In the case of the modern German Fleet the British Admiralty had little officers of the British Navy, the German Emperor remained for some For the first time in the history of the British Fleet naval manoeuvres German Navy--a work which British officers regard with admiration. character of the British and German Navies at this time and the policy of the new naval policy of the German Empire: entrance of Germany upon the high seas as a first-class naval Power, German Fleet[14] with the Superb class of the British Navy, is given in increase of the German Navy personnel of about 5,700 men a year. vigorous naval agitation of the Emperor, the German Fleet, as was "the German Fleet must be so strong that not even the greatest naval superior sea-power, the Battle Fleet provided for by the Navy Law would id = 41244 author = Matthews, Franklin title = With the Battle Fleet Cruise of the Sixteen Battleships of the United States Atlantic Fleet from Hampton Roads to the Golden Gate, December, 1907-May, 1908 date = keywords = Admiral; Arenas; Bay; Captain; Chile; Christmas; Connecticut; Evans; Jack; Louisiana; Majesty; Navy; Neptune; New; Pacific; President; Punta; Rio; San; States; United; Vermont; american; brazilian; day; fleet; man; officer; ship summary = Admiral Evans had his own notions as to the way a great fleet should set executive officer who "had to have the ship working like a chronometer, Three days out, every ship got wireless messages from Father Neptune good ship Louisiana that I have this day issued orders to the each party went ashore the executive officer on each ship read to them How the Battleship Fleet Greeted the New Year at Sea--Good Will the entire fleet, to be published on each ship the next day: ship of the fleet, a great beam of white shot out across the starboard "Viewed from the deck of a ship in the harbor the city of Rio looks like The saluting signal came and the 3-inch guns on the ships roared out a A welcome to you, Admirals and officers of the American fleet. About 175 men from each ship and all the officers of the fleet were id = 40871 author = Miles, Alfred H. (Alfred Henry) title = Fifty-two Stories of the British Navy, from Damme to Trafalgar. date = keywords = Admiral; Blake; Captain; Duke; Earl; Edward; England; English; France; George; God; Henry; John; King; Lord; Mr.; Nelson; Prince; Richard; Royal; Ruyter; STORY; Sir; Spain; Spaniards; St.; Tromp; british; dutch; french; ship; spanish summary = vice-admiral, put to sea, with a fleet of twenty-eight men-of-war, to of Good Hope, having then on board his ship fifty-seven men and but fleets waited and attended in the seas for none but the English ships, them a frigate to the admiral of our English ships, which being come fleet of twenty-five ships under the command of Admiral Blake. ready a fleet of seventy men-of-war, under the command of Admiral Van high-admiral, had two captains on board his ship--Sir William Penn, who India fleet, ships of very great value, with four men-of-war, were taken fleet; and soon after four of their men-of-war, two fire-ships, and lost twenty ships; four admirals were killed and a great many captains; to discover the enemy leaving orders with the captain of the fire-ship daybreak ten sail of the enemy''s men-of-war and several small ships were the admiral, about this time discovering the French fleet, ordered him id = 46788 author = Statham, Edward Phillips title = The Story of the "Britannia" The training ship for naval cadets. With some account of previous methods of naval education, and of the new scheme of 1903. date = keywords = Academy; Admiralty; Britannia; Cadet; Captain; Cheap; College; Dartmouth; Edition; Harris; Illustrated; Lord; Mr.; Naval; Navy; New; Photo; Plates; Rev.; Royal; School; Sir; The.=; Vols; illustration summary = Day--The Cadet Captains--No "Hampers" Allowed--Punishments-Captain Sir John Phillimore, who, going round the College a short time Experiment--Institution of Cadets'' Training Ship--Captain Harris The story of the institution of a training ship for naval cadets, commencing a new epoch in the history of the cadets'' training ship. in the sea-going training-ship was to count as sea time, and the cadet sea-going training ship being heard of at all; moreover, the cadets a sea-going training-ship for cadets, in which they were to spend one [Illustration: THE FOURTH "BRITANNIA" AS TRAINING SHIP. naval cadets are trained on board H.M.S. _Britannia_ are [Illustration: LIEUTENANT MAINWARING AND CADET CAPTAINS. cadets in the _Britannia_, in the times of Captain Harris and Mr. Inskip, did learn, in considerably less than two years, to work a L. M."--an old _Britannia_ boy--says that in his time a cadet was ="Britannia" Training Ship for Naval Cadets, The Story of.= With some id = 40847 author = Wharton, W. J. L. (William James Lloyd) title = A Short History of H.M.S. Victory date = keywords = Admiral; Captain; England; Lord; Nelson; Sir; VICTORY; french summary = The "VICTORY" had, at one time, six enemy''s ships on her, and was command of the Channel fleet, and the "VICTORY" flew the flag of command; 14 other line-of-battle ships and some frigates having The French fleet of 17 sail, under Admiral Martin, were sighted off united French and Spanish fleets amounted to 38 ships of the line, the British ships pushed with all sail in a compact line, "VICTORY" leeward, but Nelson, in the _Captain_, the third ship of the line from The fleet sailed next day (the "VICTORY" being now a private ship) squadron of 5 line-of-battle ships, off Cape Sicie, when Lord Nelson The fleet now consisted of the following ships:--"VICTORY," 104, took two ships of the line, and forced the French admiral from his 104 { "VICTORY" { Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson, K.B. year was spent by the "VICTORY" and fleet of 10 sail, in blockading